Who are we as a society? What kind of society do we live in if there is no desire to help the people who need it most? Homeless young people really are the most vulnerable people in society. They are someone’s daughter, someone’s son, and something has happened in their life – either by their own hand but quite often not – that has meant they fall between the cracks. We live in a society with very little safety net. I have made bad decisions. If I didn’t have the support of my family, god knows where I would be. And some people don’t have that.
But you can’t begin to help anyone without having an understanding. I made my new documentary, Hidden and Homeless, after a man in a suit tutted loudly when he saw me offering money to a young homeless man in Shoreditch.
What went wrong in that man’s life to make him react like that? There was such a lack of empathy. We live in a society where some people demonise the most vulnerable, and I find that disturbing. I wondered whether that was everyone’s opinion.
I found that everything is set up for people to fail. It is the demonisation of an entire class. There are twice as many people sleeping rough on the streets of Manchester as there were a year ago. And those are just the people who have been counted. And to be included in this statistic means you have to be in a sleeping bag and actually asleep when they do the count.
We live in a society where some people demonise the most vulnerable
They try everything not to put you on that list. And those sleeping rough are not all the people who are homeless. If you are in a hostel, you are homeless. If you are sofa-surfing, crashing on a mate’s couch, you are homeless. It is such a multi-faceted problem.
With the benefit cuts to under 25-year-olds, so many young people are going to lose their homes. And what happens then? Government departments are looking at a spreadsheet, ‘here’s how we save some money’. But it is a real short-term fix. Prevention is always better than cure.